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Tom Cruise, Paramount and Hollywood Power's
by Richard Stoyeck |
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Published on this site: November 23th, 2006 - See more articles from this month
Until the 1950's, Hollywood was controlled by seven major motion picture
studios. More importantly it was controlled by moguls, all of whom were
men they of eastern European descent, who ruled the studio in the same
way that the kings of their previous countries ruled the peasants. Creative
control belonged to the mogul, while the money was always controlled by the New
York bankers, the so-called "Suits".
This power alignment began with the beginning of Hollywood prior to 1920,
and continued for 40 plus years. What held it intact was the caste system,
whereby the stars were controlled by individual studios. They were paid
on a yearly basis, and had no say whatsoever in the movies they would
appear in. In essence they were slaves to the system, not very different from how baseball
players were handled until the Supreme Court outlawed career-long captive
players.
The Hollywood caste system began to crack in the 1950's, when Kirk Douglas,
the father of Michael Douglas went independent, and formed one of the
first independent film companies called Bryna, for his mother. They produced
the "Vikings", "Spartacus", and "Seven Days in
May".
The so called Studio system was now dead. Power shifted to the individual
actors, who became brand names in their own right.
Two developments began in the 1960's. The Hollywood studios would be taken
over by corporations, and then reacquired by giant multinational corporations
seeking world-wide influence. The second development was that the stars
began to exercise their power. Giant multinationals like Sony, Newscorp,
and Viacom hated the fact that stars had so much power. In the last ten years,
A-List actors like Tom Cruise, Johnny Depp, and Robert Redford started
to receive profit participations, which the studios only gave begrudgingly.
At first it didn't matter because Hollywood accounting is such that somehow
the studios could always show a loss on the movie. The stars got wise
to that very quickly, and started taking front end participations, a percentage
of the ticket when movie goers bought their tickets. In my 35 years on
Wall Street, I participated in financing many movies, and I have to tell you that nobody
ever made money on the backend. No matter how big the movie, somehow the
movie always lost money when it came to the backend participations.
We have now reached a point where the giant multinationals that control
media on a world wide basis are fed up with what they are putting up with
on behalf of brand name stars. Mel Gibson as you know has run into trouble
on the West Coast with his drinking, and purported anti-Semitic remarks
resulting in Disney canceling a Holocaust series with Gibson's production company.
Now Tom Cruise has had a falling out with Sumner Redstone, and Viacom.
Publicly Redstone has stated he doesn't like some of Cruise's actions
in the last year. This doesn't make sense. Normally when a studio breaks
with a star, there is no public statement. None is required to be given,
and they just part ways. This is more personal.
It is rumored that Viacom had offered Cruise a $2 million production deal,
down from $4 million in the previous deal, plus a $6 million fund for
the development of movie projects. Here's the real deal. Tom Cruise did
"Mission Impossible III" for Viacom, the movie grosses near $400 million world-wide. Cruise had
negotiated as a fee, 25% of Viacom's gross revenue on the movie.
This is the way it works. The movie does $400 million. The theaters get
half, and Viacom gets half, that's $200 million apiece. Cruise gets 25%
of Viacom's half, that's $50 million. In the end Viacom gets $150 million,
and Cruise gets $50 million. Sounds great for Viacom doesn't it. Not really,
Viacom must pay for the movie which had to be $150 million plus advertising.
Viacom gets zero, and Cruise still gets $50 million. This is why Sumner
Redstone of Viacom is annoyed, and Cruise is sitting on top of the world.
In the end Redstone will last laugh, why you ask? There's still Hollywood
accounting to deal with. Remember that all the original Hollywood studios
were sold off into the hands of multinational corporations (MNC's). Do
you really think the MNC's bought the studios for the theater gross? Absolutely
not.In reality movie ticket sales represent a third of a movie's earnings
power. Viacom can lose money on a picture, and still make a fortune on
DVD sales (a third), and future television and cable rights (a third).
The MNC's have never shared profits on these other two-thirds of the revenue,
and they never will. They refuse to even discuss it, and the numbers are
buried deep in the corporation's financial statements. They are never
broken out, and they are kept secret. Viacom has made, and will make hundreds of millions
of dollars on Mission Impossible III.
Redstone got fed up and threw Cruise off the lot. There are now statements
being made by Cruise's production partner Paula Wagner. She says that
Cruise is raising $200 million from hedge funds to fund Cruise's future
projects. Wait until these Wall Street hedge fund types learn about Hollywood
accounting. They are going to lose their shirts funding movies. This is
not an industry that Wall Street should want to get involved with. Losing
your shirt is one thing, but not even knowing that you have lost it until
you are standing naked in the street is quite another.
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Richard Stoyeck's - background includes being a limited partner
at Bear Stearns, Senior VP at Lehman Brothers, Kuhn Loeb, Arthur Andersen,
and KPMG. Educated at Pace University, NYU, and Harvard University, today
he runs Rockefeller Capital Partners and http://StocksAtBottom.com
http://www.stocksatbottom.com
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